The Australian Senator for Beijing?

“Perhaps his mistake was to say
something sensible about Australia's relations with China, not something we
normally expect from our politicians.”

Australia's PM Malcolm Turnbull shakes hands with China's President Xi Jinping at G20 Summit in eastern China's Zhejiang province, September,2016. Associated Press/Ng Han Guan. All rights reserved.It is hard for those of us who are
not members of the NSW Labor Right Faction to feel much sympathy for its
members who get into trouble, but the events leading up to Senator Dastyari's
resignation from the Opposition Front Bench deserve further scrutiny.

Perhaps the most interesting
feature of these events is that, while the Senator fessed up, repeating ad
nauseam "I made a mistake", he did not tell us what exactly his
mistake was. Was it that he asked businesses to pay some of his personal
expenses? Or was it that they were foreign and, if not foreign, then
Chinese-owned, businesses that appeared to have, as many Chinese-owned
businesses do, links with the Chinese Government. So, in owing these
businesses, Dastyari may appear to have owed something indirectly to the
Chinese Government.

Meanwhile, those of us who are not
on a 200K+ salary with work-related travel expenses thrown in are left to
marvel at the sense of entitlement that enabled the Senator to flick expenses
he had no wish to pay himself off to a couple of businessmen. What might he
have done that they have already owed him for or what might he have to give
them in return?

No rules broken

To be fair, many of Dastyari's
Coalition critics were not much better; everyone agreed that he had broken no
rules in twice asking Chinese-owned businesses to pay his bills, one for the
relatively small, given his salary, travel expense of $1670 and the other
a $5,000 legal bill; nor was it disputed that he had taken part in a press conference
on June 17 with Huang Xiangmo, owner of the Yuhu Group, who paid the legal
bill.

Dastyari was quoted in a
Chinese-language report as saying “The
South China Sea is China’s own affair... Australia should remain neutral and
respect China on this matter.” This was interpreted as taking a position on the
South Chine Sea dispute that was more sympathetic to the Chinese Government's
position than the stated Government and Opposition policy that all parties
should respect international law – as Australia can hardly claim to have done.

If this last comment seems harsh,
think of Australia's participation in American-led invasions of dubious
legality, its disgraceful conduct during the current dispute with Timor L'este
over control of a large oilfield in the Timor Sea and its persistent evasion of
crucial provisions of the UN Refugee Convention.

Dastyari claimed that he had either
been misquoted or had “misspoke”, an awkward American euphemism for saying what
you did not mean. He also repeated that he supported Labor policy on this
issue. His critics took him at his quoted word suggesting that this was a case
of cash for comment and, further, that Opposition leader Bill Shorten should
have dismissed him from the Labor Front Bench. Shorten's failure to act on this
was interpreted by the Prime Minister and Treasurer as a sign of weakness.

Labor did its best to tie
Dastyari's conduct to the broader issue of foreign donations to Australian
parties – an area where everyone agrees that reform is needed – but the
Coalition would have none of it, insisting that a donation to an individual was
unlike a donation to a political party. Its suggestion was that if there was a
link between the Senator taking money from Chinese companies and him
subsequently speaking out on China's side in an international dispute, the
Senator's mistake was not so much the act of asking a private business to
handle some of his bills as that of raising the suspicion that in accepting
this payment, he had enabled the business owner to influence his views. Or
perhaps his mistake was to say something sensible about Australia's relations
with China, not something we normally expect from our politicians.

In trouble anyway

What, then, of the views Dastyari
seems to have expressed? The first difficulty we face here is that in the
absence of a full transcript, it is not clear what, other than the quoted
words, the Senator may have said about the issue. Suppose he had really said
something like “The South China Sea is an issue for China to sort out with its
neighbours in accordance with the freedom of the seas” adding that “Australia
should remain neutral and respect China's views...” ? The first sentence,
qualifications included, seems harmless enough but the second would still have
landed the Senator in trouble. The point about remaining neutral and respecting
China's views challenges Australia's bipartisan approach to the South China
Sea, which is not simply to endorse the freedom of the seas but also to support
America's aggressive actions on the issue.

Australia on China

There is little evidence of serious
Australian attempts to understand China's views – reports published by the Lowy
Institute, which bills itself as Australia's leading think tank, have taken a
solidly one-sided view of the South China Sea dispute. Those of us with no
specialist knowledge of China could do worse than acknowledge that, while China
was a founder member of the UN and remains a permanent member of the Security
Council, only the defeated Taipei (ROC) government was recognised by the UN, a
situation that changed only after President Nixon's visit to Beijing in 1971.
As a result, the Beijing (PRC) government, was not recognised by the UN as the
legitimate government of China and it took no part in formal UN discussions
before that time.

There is nothing in the history of
China's relations with the west that would lead it to respect the law of the
sea. It must be tempting, and not entirely unreasonable, to view the law of the
sea as essentially an artefact of competition between western imperial powers,
a law whose imperial character has not changed much in the post-WW2 period.
China (PRC) was able to participate in the negotiations – 1973-82, while it was
still feeling its way around the UN system – leading up to the most recent and
generally accepted version of the law of the sea, UNCLOS, which finally came
into force in 1994. China would also be aware of USA's unilateral assertion in
1945 of its control over areas of the high seas contiguous to the US coast, and
also of America's heavy-handed behaviour before finally agreeing to Part X1 of
UNCLOS. Why, then, should we expect China to be impressed by a Hague tribunal's
ruling that China had no historical rights over the South Chine Sea,
particularly as the USA has now set itself up as the chief enforcer of the
LOS?

The Washington lens

Former Labor Senator and Foreign
Minister Bob Carr has been reported as warning, in comments following Paul
Keating's August 2016 address to the Australia–China Relations Institute at the
University of Technology, Sydney, that Australia should not view “China
through a Washington lens.” He also suggested that “ a lot of Australians would
think in the East China Sea we should be neutral... we should move with
like-minded opinion, not make a flamboyant gesture of running patrols that
won’t resolve anything.”

There would have been no political advantage for
anyone in attacking Bob Carr on this issue, while attacking or – in Labor's case –
doing little to defend Dastyari's views had the advantage of
avoiding the issue of Australia's subservience to the USA. The Dastyari affair,
in other words, has put off the informed debate about how to manage our
relations with China, our largest trading partner, and America, our most
powerful ally, that Australia desperately needs to have.

About the author

After working as a sociologist in Britain, Barry Hindess
joined the Australian National University in 1987, later moving to ANU’s
Research School of Social Sciences, where he learned to pass as a political
scientist and developed his interests in post-colonialism and the legacies of
liberalism and empire. He is now an Emeritus Professor in ANU’s School of
Politics and International Relations. His publications include Discourses of Power: from Hobbes to
Foucault, Governing Australia (with Mitchell Dean), Corruption and Democracy in Australia, Us and them: elites and anti-elitism in Australia (with Marian
Sawer)and Governments, NGOs and Anti-Corruption: the new integrity warriors
(with Luis de Sousa and Peter Larmour).

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